"Bog army" found in Denmark
From a report at
ScienceNordic:
Archaeologists have spent all summer excavating a small sample of what
has turned out to be a mass grave containing skeletal remains from more
than 1,000 warriors, who were killed in battle some 2,000 years ago...
The site is located in the Alken Enge wetlands near Lake Mossø on the
Jutland peninsula.
The area that has so far been excavated contained bone fragments from
around 240 men aged between 13 and 45. The men’s bones are marked by
melee weapons such as swords and axes... The marks from the predators’ bite indicate that the dead warriors were
left to die and rot on the battlefield, without anyone bothering to bury
or even remove the bodies...
One of the greatest historians of the Roman Empire, Tacitus (56 AD –
120 AD) described the aftermath of the Roman’s famous defeat in the
Battle of the Teutoburg Forest in 9 AD.
“In the middle of the
plain, bones lay either spread out or heaped, depending on whether they
had fled or resisted. Next to the bones lay bits of spears and horse
limbs, and there were also human heads nailed to trees. In the nearby
groves were barbarian altars in which they had sacrificed tribunes and
centurions of the first rank,” Tacitus wrote in his Annals...
“The bones are completely fresh,” he says. “Some DNA has been preserved,
so we can get a good profile of what Iron Age man looked like. An
anthropological analysis of the bones will provide us with a picture of
their diet and their physical appearance.” ..
The project, titled ‘The army and post-war rituals in the Iron Age –
warriors sacrificed in the bog at Alken Enge in Illerup Ådal’ is a
collaboration between archaeologists and geologists at Skanderborg
Museum, Moesgård Museum and Aarhus University.
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